Like that other great love letter to the city of Austin, Texas, Richard Linklater’s Slacker, Siren Songs from the Heart of Austin focuses on many characters, all with different stories and perspectives on life. Unlike the former, though, Andrew Geyer’s collection of stories re-visits characters, and develops them in a much more novelistic style. The twenty-two stories blend magical realism, literary and Biblical allusions, and poetical prose into a book that is more than the sum of its parts; the reader feels as if he or she is walking the streets of Austin, visiting the settings of these stories, interacting with their first-person narrators. A range of emotions fills the pages—rage, lust, envy, regret, love—and readers will find themselves laughing at one moment, and deeply moved the next. Though many of the stories share similar threads, they never repeat themselves, a testament to the careful crafting of Geyer’s second cycle of short stories. And while some of the questions asked are never answered, we are given strong enough glimpses to come to our own conclusions about the fates of these fascinating characters.